Biography: life and films
Robert Le Vigan was born Robert-Charles-Alexandre Coquillaud, on 7th January
1900, in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, France, where his father worked
as a veterinary surgeon. Rather than follow his father's profession,
the young Robert opted instead to become an actor. He entered the Paris
Conservatoire, but left without graduating when he realised he would never
be awarded the first prize because of his military commitments. After
completing his military service as an infantryman in the French zone of Wiesbaden,
he began touring the provinces in theatre companies run by Gaston Baty and
Louis Jouvet. From 1919, he enjoyed a busy stage career, appearing
in productions of plays by Molière, George Bernard Shaw and Georges
Courteline.
It was Le Vigan's performance in Jouvet's production of a Jules Romains play,
Donogoo, in 1930 that led Julien Duvivier to give him his first screen
role in
Les Cinq gentlemen
maudits (1931). Although Le Vigan was never star material Duvivier
had an immense regard for him as an actor and would call upon his services
in a further six films including
La
Bandera (1935) and
La
Charrette fantôme (1939). The most surprising role that
Le Vigan received from Duvivier was that of Jesus Christ in his Biblical
drama
Golgotha (1935) - surprising
because the actor's film repertoire consists mainly of outright villains,
pathetic losers and terrifying lunatics. Le Vigan rewarded his director's
faith in him with a portrayal of Christ that is nothing less than inspired.
Duvivier was not the only prominent French filmmaker of this time who appreciated
Le Vigan's talents as a character actor. Jean Renoir cast him in two
of his films, first as the vile extortionist Lheureux in
Madame Bovary (1933), then
as the alcoholic actor on a tragic decline in
Les Bas-fonds (1936).
Marcel Pagnol made use of his comedic skills as a contemptible authority
figure in
Regain (1937), and in
Marcel Carné's
Le Quai
des brumes (1938) Le Vigan plays on our sympathies with a devastating
depiction of an artist at the end of his tether. The actor's penchant
for the sinister and grotesque is more than apparent in Christian-Jaque's
Les Disparus de Saint-Agil
(1938).
During the Nazi Occupation of France, Robert Le Vigan had absolutely no qualms
about working for the German run company Continental, appearing as a colourful
neurotic in Christian-Jaque's
L'Assassinat du Père
Noël (1941). He made no secret of his pro-Vichy feelings.
He wrote a letter to the head of Continental, Alfred Greven, thanking him
for the opportunity to participate in the 'new order' and even went as far
as expressing his anti-Semitic views in a series of sketches broadcast by
Radio-Paris. He made a habit of sending letters to the Gestapo denouncing
his show business associates and in 1943, under the influence of his friend
Louis-Ferdinand Céline, a well-known anti-Semite, he joined the Parti
populaire français, a French fascist party led by Jacques Doriot.
Surpassing his screen villainy through his underhand real-life exploits,
Le Vigan would later earn himself the reputation of one of the most flagrant
Nazi collaborators of his profession. Meanwhile, he continued to be
a highly sought-after and popular actor, and it was during the Occupation
that he delivered his finest screen performance, as the totally unhinged
Goupi Tonkin in Jacques Becker's atmospheric rural thriller
Goupi Mains Rouges (1943).
Knowing nothing of the actor's collaborationist tendencies, Marcel Carné
gave him the role of Jéricho in
Les Enfants du paradis, but
had to replace him with Pierre Renoir when the actor quit the scene after
hearing that the Allies had just landed in Italy.
When justice caught up with Robert Le Vigan it did so with a terrible and
unforgiving swiftness. He managed to avoid the Épuration légale
(legal purge) after the Liberation by fleeing to Germany with Céline,
but he was arrested whilst trying to escape to Switzerland in March 1945.
After being held in Fresnes prison, he was brought to trial in 1946 but,
despite passionate appeals from his former colleagues (Duvivier, Jean-Louis
Barrault, Louis Jouvet, and others), he was found guilty of collaboration.
Stripped of his civic rights, he was spared the guillotine but was sentenced
to ten years' hard labour. He was released after three years and went
into exile, first in Spain, then in Argentina.
In 1951 and 1952, Le Vigan bowed out of cinema by appearing in five films
in Argentina. His acting career now well and truly over, he managed
to subsist by giving lessons in French and Greek and working as a taxi driver.
He ended his life in destitution and ill-health, surviving by doing odd jobs
and selling cakes in the streets. François Truffaut contacted
him in the late 1960s to try to persuade him to return to France. But
Le Vigan was in too poor a state of health, both physically and mentally,
to go anywhere. The man who had once dazzled audiences with his screen
portrayals, who had been the first actor to play Jesus Christ in a sound
movie and had seventy film credits to his name died in obscurity in the Argentinean
town of Tandil, on 12th October 1972, aged 72.
© James Travers 2017
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